Everyone has sinned (Eccl. 7:20).
If Ecclesiastes can say that everyone will sin, generations before I'm born then either a) there really is no free will or b) the bar for 'sin' is set ridiculously low which makes the whole thing a con.
Repent for our own sins is what I meant.
Just a soon as someone explains why they are sins.
Because if we don't repent, our rebellion is ongoing.
Having a different opinion is also a sin - religion is ultimate authoritarian state, where difference of thought is criminal.
Nobody is in line for eternal punishment for someone else's transgressions.
If Adam and Eve hadn't eaten the fruit, as it was explained above, none of us would die and be subject to judgement, right?
They were not sins, they made you ceremonially unclean. They were outward signs of a change of heart, until the Messiah came.
'Ceremonially unclean'? God's baseless preferences enforced on society to create opportunities for judgement...
Forcibly enslaving someone is stealing a person and is forbidden somewhere in the pentateuch, as is rape.
The Old Testament does not once raise any issue with slavery as a concept, it has some issues with certain types of treatment of slaves. Rape is not a concept that was known to the Hebrews- at worst it was seen as theft of a man's sexual property, which is disturbing in itself. Imagine how much better a world we'd be in if the Old Testament had made rape a sin, or suggested that committing rape made you 'ritually unclean'; imagine how much better a world we'd be in if even one passage in the 39/46 books had expressed mild disappointment that people might want to think about owning other people... and then tell me that this is 'the good book'. Your God, apparently had the foresight to ban shellfish in an age before refrigeration, but not the foresight to envision refrigeration, whilst at the same time not being able to ensure that his instructions included even a hint of disapproval for sexual violence or slavery? Maybe this isn't an all-powerful, all-knowing, perfectly moral being after all.
O.